Publication Date:
2002
abstract:
Surface growth models may give rise to unstable growth with mound formation
whose tipical linear size L increases in time. In one dimensional systems
coarsening is generally driven by an attractive interaction between domain
walls or kinks. This picture applies to growth models for which the largest
surface slope remains constant in time (model B): coarsening is known to be
logarithmic in the absence of noise (L(t)=log t) and to follow a power law
(L(t)=t{1/3}) when noise is present. If surface slope increases
indefinitely, the deterministic equation looks like a modified
Cahn-Hilliard equation: here we study the late stage of coarsening through
a linear stability analysis of the stationary periodic configurations and
through a direct numerical integration. Analytical and numerical results
agree with regard to the conclusion that steepening of mounds makes
deterministic coarsening faster: if alpha is the exponent describing the
steepening of the maximal slope M of mounds (Malpha = L) we find that
L(t)=t n: n is equal to 1/4 for 12, according to n=alpha/(5*alpha -2).
On the other side, the numerical solution of the corresponding stochastic
equation clearly shows that in the presence of shot noise steepening of
mounds makes coarsening slower than in model B: L(t)=t^{1/4},
irrespectively of alpha. Finally, the presence of a symmetry breaking term
is shown not to modify the coarsening law of model alpha=1, both in the
absence and in the presence of noise.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors: